Three hunger strikers end their protest after nearly 50 days

Qesser Zuhrah smiling in a photo. (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)
Qesser Zuhrah was on hunger strike at HMP Bronzefield in Surrey (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)

A third hunger striker among a group who allegedly took part in Palestine Action raids on defence facilities has ended her action after 48 days.

Qesser Zuhrah,  20, was hospitalised as she took part in the protest originally involving eight people while she awaits trial in HMP Bronzefield.

A legal letter sent to the government confirmed that she has ended her action, which had seen her transferred from the prison in Surrey to hospital after supporters including Zarah Sultana MP took up her case.

Two others had previously ended their actions as they await trial.

The letter with a 24-hour deadline has been sent by lawyers acting for the hunger strikers, contesting David Lammy’s refusal to meet them.

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The pre-action notice has been sent ‘as a matter of urgency’ as the group’s health deteriorates and ‘the risk of their dying increases every day.’

Imran Khan & Partners Solicitors is representing all eight hunger strikers being held on remand in the legal move initiated yesterday.

From top left: Qesser Zuhrah, Amu Gib, Heba Muraisi, Jon Cink, Teuta Hoxha, Kamran Ahmed, Lewie Chiaramello and Muhammed Umer Khalid (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)
From top left: Qesser Zuhrah, Amu Gib, Heba Muraisi, Jon Cink, Teuta Hoxha, Kamran Ahmed, Lewie Chiaramello and Muhammed Umer Khalid (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)

‘Risk of dying increases every day’

They want the justice secretary and/or an appointed government or Prison Service official to meet the group and ‘attempt to resolve the situation’.

The longest hunger strike is being undertaken by Amy ‘Amu’ Gardiner-Gibson, who has now gone without food for 51 days.

All the claimants are on remand, charged with offences relating to break-ins or criminal damage linked to Palestine Action.

Zuhrah was arrested in a dawn raid on November 19, 2024, by counter-terrorism officers in the third wave of arrests in connection with the August 2024 raid on the Elbit Systems plant in Filton, Bristol.

She was subsequently charged with non-terror offences.

Heba Muraisi, Teuta Hoxha and Kamran Ahmed are also taking part in the hunger strike. Jon Cink and Umer Kalid have since ended their participation after 41 and 13 days respectively.

All are denied bail after their alleged involvement in the Palestine Action raids on the arms factory owned by Elbit, Israel’s largest manufacturer for weapons, and RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire.

The activists have been in prison for more than a year as they wait to be tried, breaking the UK’s six-month pre-trial detention limit.

Qesser Zuhrah smiling in a photo. (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)
Qesser Zuhrah was hospitalised at one point in her hunger strike while on remand at HMP Bronzefield in Surrey (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)

The letter gives ministers 24 hours to respond, with the deadline being this afternoon at 2pm. The solicitors claim that the claimants have not had adequate medical care and treatment in prison and the life-threatening situation has not been addressed by the government.

The letter reads: ‘Please note that this pre-action letter before claim is sent, as a matter of urgency, as our clients’ health continues to deteriorate, such that the risk of their dying increases every day.

‘They request an urgent meeting with the proposed Defendant to discuss the deterioration of our clients’ health and to discuss attempts to resolve the situation.’

LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 18: Rahma Hoxha, the sister of Teuta Hoxha who is on hunger strike while being held on remand for offences related to activism on behalf of Palestine Action, speaks during a press conference relating to hunger-striking Palestine Action activists on December 18, 2025 in London, England. Supporters of the eight prisoners who continue to be held on remand as they await trial for alleged offences committed on behalf of Palestine Action before it was proscribed as a terrorist organisation, held a press conference calling on better treatment by the prison authorities and for the government to consider their demands which include being allowed access to mail, to read books without prior clearance and to be bailed before their trial. (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)
Supporters of hunger strikers being held on remand charged speak at a press conference in London (Photo by Carl Court/Getty Images)

‘Degrading treatment in prison’

In a statement via Prisoners for Palestine group, Zuhrah said: ‘They won’t imprison us all, they know if they fill the prisons with activists, we will overpower them from within. So flood the damn streets in your millions.

‘Shut down these factories in your thousands!

‘They can never arrest the resistance in our smiles.’

The protesters’ demands include ‘end all censorship’ of communication and correspondence in jail, immediate bail, ‘right to a fair’ trial, de-proscribing Palestine Action and shutting Elbit down.

Zuhrah, from Woolwich, south-east London, also said the group wanted to ‘reaffirm our commitment’ to the pro-Palestine struggle from prison.

Shahmina Alam, sister of Kamran Ahmed, who has gone 44 days without food, has told Metro that he has been ‘double handcuffed’ and subjected to degrading treatment while on remand.

A Ministry of Justice spokesperson said: ‘We strongly refute these claims.

‘We want these prisoners to accept support and get better, and we will not create perverse incentives that would encourage more people to put themselves at risk through hunger strikes.’

Teuta Hoxha Prison: HMP Peterborough Prisoner number: A9261FE On remand since: November 19th 2024 Trial date: April 2026 T was arrested in the dawn raids against Palestine activists on 19th November 2024 by counter-terrorism police in the third wave of Filton arrests on allegations of being connected to the Filton action, which saw over ?1 million in damage caused to Elbit?s research centre for Israeli weapons making her one of the Filton 24. Although the terror charges were dropped, she has been held in remand ever since and has spent her 29th birthday behind bars. T previously blockaded the entrance of Elbit?s Bristol HQ, forcing the Israeli weapons maker to close, and soon after, she also disrupted Elbit-investor BNY Mellon?s office in Manchester. She was moved from HMP Bronzefield on the day MPs voted to proscribe Palestine Action. On 11 August 2025, T went on hunger strike in protest of the prison?s violations of her fundamental rights such as the cancellation of her recreational and educational activities, the withholding of her mail, and her removal from a job in the prison library. She also reported mistreatment by guards, who constantly referred to her as a terrorist. She has both been called a terrorist by prison staff and told she belongs to a terrorist group, continuously being subject to retrospective punishment after the proscription of Palestine Action before, during and after her hunger strike which she ended in victory after 28 days of resistance. During T?s hunger strike, she was joined by two political prisoners in the US, Casey Goonan and Mohammed Malik in a stunning action of fearless and humbling solidarity transcending man-made imaginary borders. In her reflections on her hunger strike, she cites the Islamic proverb, ?Our mercy and compassion for each other is like that of a body. When any limb aches, the whole body reels with sleeplessness and fever,? contemplating that, ??it is with this view we accept that global solidarity movements constitute one body. What affects one affects us all. Therefore in the same vein we say there is no freedom until Palestine is free.?
Teuta Hoxha has continued her hunger strike (Picture: Prisoners for Palestine)

Government doubles down on refusal

Lord Timpson, minister of state for prisons, probation and reducing reoffending, also doubled down on the government’s position.

Lord Timpson said: ‘While very concerning, hunger strikes are not a new issue for our prisons.

‘Over the last five years, we’ve averaged over 200 a year and we have longstanding procedures in place to ensure prisoner safety.

‘Prison healthcare teams provide NHS care and continuously monitor the situation. HMPPS are clear that claims that hospital care is being refused are entirely misleading – they will always be taken when needed and a number of these prisoners have already been treated in hospital.

‘These prisoners are charged with serious offences including aggravated burglary and criminal damage.

‘Remand decisions are for independent judges, and lawyers can make representations to the court on behalf of their clients.

‘Ministers will not meet with them – we have a justice system that is based on the separation of powers, and the independent judiciary is the cornerstone of our system.

‘It would be entirely unconstitutional and inappropriate for ministers to intervene in ongoing legal cases.’

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